July 27, 2009

AZLTRON 500th Post Spectacular! Part 1!

It’s been a long time since the beginning of this blog, which is now well into it’s third year. I just realized not too long ago that the 500th post was coming up fast, and wouldn’t you know it, here it is. In a celebratory fashion I thought I would write about ten of the albums that I’ve listened to over the years that have changed the way I listen to music. I have three criteria for this list: These albums must be albums that came out during my lifetime (that means no collections or retrospectives), the albums must be albums that I discovered myself through word of mouth or research and the albums must be albums that I listened to almost religiously. Here is the list in chronological order:

1. Moby – Play (1999)

As I made my way through adolescence I found that I didn’t particularly enjoy the knuckle dragging pyrotechnics of heavy metal gone pop acts like Metallica despite how hard I tried to like it. I must have listened to Reload three times expecting for something magical to overtake me. I was searching for something more intelligent, something with more energy and sound experimentation. Something with soul. I discovered Moby amongst all the techno acts that my brother was playing back to back with the Metallica discography. There was something present in his music, a simplicity and an energy that was satisfying and stimulating. It was Moby who made me realize that creating music wasn’t out of reach for me. I began to look to Moby for guidance both musically and stylistically. Because of him I started listening to Joy Division/New Order. Granted I went to a highschool where hardcore music was the accepted norm, so you can imagine those fights over the CD player. To further compound how awkward of a teenager I was, I even looked to the cover of Play for fashion tips. I established my wardrobe as a collection of dress shirts, dress pants and running shoes. That’s right, I looked to a balding man in his late 30′s to help me create an identity. Moby’s Play album had all the right ingredients for teenagers to like him I, think. He had the pop singles (Porcelain, Southside) and the crazy dance songs (Bodyrock, Machete) and the emotional introspective tunes (Guitar Flute and String, My Weakness, The Sky is Broken, etc.). His songs ran the full gamut of emotion that should be able to soundtrack the mundane disapointments and victories of a teenager’s life. They did for me anyway.

2. Spoon – Girls Can Tell (2001)

I discovered spoon by watching Austin City Limits on PBS. It was a chance encounter since I didn’t even know that Austin City Limits even existed two week before. I was seeing which channels I could get on my 13″ television from my room. Lo’ and behold a music program! The week prior to the airing of the Spoon concert (which was followed by Ben Kweller) David Byrne made an electric appearance on the program, thus beginning my addiction to all things Talking Heads/David Byrne. So I knew the program was on the level. Looking back it made perfect sense that Spoon would play Austin City Limits because they are from Austin Texas. When I was watching Spoon play their songs I noticed that they had crisp clear pop song structure and they incorporated the piano up front! I was so impressed I began searching for their music anywhere I could find it, and the first album that I ran across was “Girls Can Tell”. The album is a hit from beginning to end with such emotionally charged hits as “Everything Hits at Once” and one of my favorite songs ever, “Anything You Want”. In short, Spoon showed me that music could be raw and gutsy with a good riff, some sweet beats and no pyrotechnics or a mullet.

3. The Postal Service – Give Up (2002)

The Postal Service was an important step in the evolution of my musical taste. When the emo explosion hit my high school I was staying as far away from it as I could. I was venturing into New Wave territory, exploring Gary Numan and New Order records. That was my line into the Postal Service, that the electronic element of their music was so prevalent, and the samples were ingenious, swirling strings and atari-ish clinking samples. It distracted me from the overly saccharine and emotional vocals of Ben Gibbard and Jenny Lewis until I could get adjusted to them. This was the first time that I could forge common ground with the emo kids. Who were much more reasonable than the aggro-rock kids at sharing the art-room radio. This great combination and reconfiguration of emotional vocals and experimental electronic production sent me in a whole new direction in my search for new music. I looked for years for other musical artists that sounded “Postal Servicey”. This led me to find the excellent Jimmy Tamborello led projects Figurine and DNTEL, Lali Puna, The Notwist, Plastic Operator, The LK, The Burnside Project and Helicopters. Even though it’s been six years since the Postal Service arrived on the scene, their songs and musical compositions are just as potent. If the little hairs on your arm don’t stand up on the beginning of “Such Great Heights”, you might want to check yourself for a pulse.

4. Interpol – Turn on the Bright Lights (2002)

I discovered Interpol through music researching on Amazon. The bajillion comparisons to Joy Division initially led me to listen to them. Personally I don’t think they sound anything alike at all. Interpol has a much more lush sound, while Joy Division was very raw, even at their most atmospheric. Ranting aside, Interpol reaches out with their sound and just envelopes you. the chiming guitars, insanely nimble drum and bass and the hypnotic vocals of Paul Banks grab you and threaten to never let you go. I often find that whenever I listen to them I end up playing them for hours and hours. The inventiveness of their guitar solos on “Roland” and “The New” are still immensely powerful. Whenever the solos kick in I imagine some kind of gravity inversion where everyone on a New York City street suddenly starts floating or something like that Rhapsody Commercial.What makes them even better is that in between these incredible shows of musicianship their songwriting abilities embed each number into your cranium. To top it off, thier video for “PDA” still stands as one of the best music videos of the last ten years. Furthermore their shoe gazey guitar heroics led me to look for more NYC based bands with similar chops. Like…

5. stellastarr* – stellastarr* (2003)

stellastarr* is a band that formed out of the Pratt Art School in New York City. Being one interested in art and music that caught my attention immediately. I first heard about them when I was researching music on Amazon. The tagline of the review said “Sounds like Interpol Kidnapped David Byrne!” I thought to myself “Interpol? David Byrne? This has got to be good!” I looked up some of their songs and sure enough the combination of sounds in stellastarr* were a mixture to rival peanut butter and chocolate. The album opens up with thick layers of delay and atmosphere, warranting the Interpol comparisons, as well as revealing the vocal talents of the group harmonizing and highlighting the low to high yelps of frontman Shawn Christensen. Although proficient at this haunting style of music, stellastarr*’s real strength is party starting propulsion. Once the firecracker that is the track “Jenny” lights off the raw energy takes over and anyone with eardrums will immediately be hooked on stellastarr*. From there the album drops in pace a bit for “A Million Reason” which is a kickin’ song and is followed by the track that stellastarr* made their name with. The bouncy relentless juggernaut that is “My Coco”. If you haven’t heard this by now, what are you waiting for? There is one more peak of freak out dance party goodness in the volcanic eruption of guitar melee in “Somewhere Across Forever”. The album winds down a bit from there before a second wind of sweaty exuberance ends the album on “Pulp Song”, which finds all three vocalists screaming the album to sleep. If you’ve got to go out, go out with a bang, and stellastarr* does that in a big way on their debut album.

June 16, 2009

War Tapes ‘Dreaming of You’!

Filed under: dreaming of you,Interpol,she wants revenge,The Cure,war tapes — AZLTRON @ 5:10 am

The Night Unfolds from Carlton Beener on Vimeo.

War Tapes are a band from Downtown LA who have successfully amalgamated the dreamy pop structures of the Cure with the power and poise of NYC guitar bands like Interpol. Their debut album ‘The Continental Divide’ is now available at all the usual venues for obtaining music, be it electronically or physically.

September 27, 2008

The Killers Return, and seem more… Human.

The Killers have been controversial figures for me, their first album was one of the first in an onslaught of the return of the synthesizer in modern music. They are arguably one of the primary forces in modern contemporary music that energized me to go out and find out what was happening in the world of music these days. It was The Killers, Modest Mouse, Interpol, Franz Ferdinand, stellastarr*and The Faint that reminded me that good music is still being made out there, you just have to look beyond the top 40 sound and production style.

The Killer’s Hot Fuss was a smorgasbord of delicious pop music accessible to many, and delectable for me because of the focus on the use of the keyboard and post punky rhythms, plus a smidge of vocoder on “Smile Like You Mean It”. It sounds cliche, but I was definitely one of those people who “Liked them before they got really popular”, but I did, they opened for stellastarr* back in the day and I liked stellastarr* so I checked them out, and lo and behold they were pretty good. Their debut album stands as one of the biggest stylistic statements, and certainly one of the most commercially successful albums of the mid 2000′s that didn’t depend on a gutteral moan and drop d tuned plucking and grunging or power chords and a whiney voice echoing the frustrations of the pre-teen upper middle class. As that, they need to be commended, but somewhere along the way, they found themselves and mutated into a country/classic rock version of themselves leaving an army of fans saying “Bruce Springsteen?” and wishing for “David Bowie”. “Sam’s Town” wasn’t a bad album by any means, and stylistic progression is commendable. Novelty moustaches are always good for a laugh, but where are The Killers that stole my heart and my money to become one of the biggest bands in the world?

Those Killers stand poised to reclaim their throne, Brandon is de-moustached and once again clothed in lounge-chic sport coats and dress pants. They have a new single, and ,if anything, “Human” brings the electronics and dance beats back into play without sacrificing their newfound sound and Brandon’s new, more earnest, vocal style. This could be the second coming of The Killers. Brace yourselves, only time will tell.

The Killers – Human

March 14, 2008

Wesley the Robot

Wesley is one suave automaton. Here are some songs that I’ve been enjoying lately.

LCD Soundsystem – Big Ideas

The Faint – I Disappear

The Raveonettes – Hallucinations

Feist – I Feel It All (Britt from Spoon Remix)

The Secret Machines – Lights On

Dandy Warhols – Horse Pills

Hot Chip – Shake a Fist

The Flaming Lips – Pilot Can at the Queer of God

Chairs in the Arno – I Never Loved You Anyways

The Somnambulants – Burning Daylight

(We Are) Performance – Live a Little

The Strokes – The Way it is

Spoon – Bring it on home to me (Sam Cooke Cover)

Iggy Pop – The Passenger

Interpol – PDA

The Wombats – Kill the Director (CSS Remix)

Talking Heads – Once in a Lifetime

Prince – Black Sweat

Grafton Primary – I Can Cook

Does it offend you, yeah? – Let’s Make Out (Extended Mix)

July 28, 2007

Sophistication in Breakdowns, Junius

Filed under: Interpol,Joy Division,Robert Smith,The Cure — AZLTRON @ 10:15 am

It seems like a bunch of post-punk acts are coming in my direction lately. Among them, Junius, an acclaimed Post Punk band hailing from Boston Massachusetts. Like many bands these days they’ve been compared to Joy Division and the Cure, but there is something that is palpably dark and brooding about their music. I’m not talking about “Susie won’t go to the dance with me, time to listen to Linkin Park!” kind of brooding. There’s something intellectual and relevant about how the Robert Smith like wailing wraps around the chiming earnest guitars. People are going to make easy conclusions that they sound just like Interpol, Editors, or any other recent post-punk revivalist band, but Junius brings modern inspirations to the table and at times explode with raw radio ready chaos that at once could attract mainstream listeners without compromising their message and image as a band. “A Word Could Kill Her” features an interpol-esque melodic descent into an all out wall of guitars and wailing that could unite the indie kids and the hardcore kids. That is if the hardcore kids can tolerate the sophistication until the breakdown.

MP3 – At the Age of Decay – Junius

Junius Myspace

Ready, Set, Go! Motion

The Omaha Nebraskan quartet Go! Motion, hearkens back to the early propulsive wailing of the Cure combined with the stop and go mayhem of Bloc Party’s dance rock aesthetic. Fans of White Rose Movement, Editors, and Interpol will find something to like here. Their take on the whole atmospheric urgent dance music is more linear and they’re not afraid to bust out homages to both The Smiths and The Cure in the same song, “Charm is Harmless”, which sounds surprisingly fresh for all of it’s Marr guitar and Cure plucks. The sustained notes of “Somewhere Nowhere” show that they didn’t need to find inspiration from U2 on their second album, like Bloc Party, they were ready out of the gates to emulate the edge while still retaining their own sound. The influences are easily deciphered on each track of Go! Motions’ debut “Kill the Love” but don’t let that distract you from the raw energy and the passion of the music.

Buy “Kill the Love”

MP3 – Charm is Harmless – Go! Motion

MP3 – Kill the Love – Go! Motion

July 19, 2007

Slow Decay, I Won’t Stop Fighting You!

Filed under: Interpol — AZLTRON @ 8:28 am

As I’ve been listening to the new Interpol album, I’ve realized that I just can’t listen to one song, once I enter the atmospheric world of Interpol reverb I have to listen to the whole album. The urgent synths and manic slower but faster drum grooves have forced their way into my brain and nestled in my frontal lobes. Interpol, why must you be so good?

MP3 – The Scale – Interpol

MP3 – Who Do You Think? – Interpol

Bonus – Public Pervert (Carlos D. Remix) – Interpol

Interpol Myspace

June 25, 2007

Today, My Heart Swings

Filed under: Interpol,The Cure — AZLTRON @ 11:02 am


The Flavor of Interpol’s latest release “Our Love to Admire” is definitely something new with familiar touches. As a band progresses they like to keep certain sounds and experiment with others so it would make sense that “Our Love to Admire” would sound like a hybrid of Turn on the Bright Lights and Antics. The trademark spare atmospheric guitar jabs are still here, but something is different about them, they have a more natural organic sound to them, and a soft keyboard line accents them often. Perhaps a more organic sound was their goal on this outing as the album art featured animals in their natural states rather than their signature red white and black text. There is something that feels more fleshed out about these songs, whether it’s the piano and wind instrument accompaniment on some tracks (No doubt the influence of aspiring composer Carlos D.), the fact that Paul Bank’s vocals have never sounded smoother, or the fact that Interpol have managed to evoke a warmer more human, not necessarily happier but maybe more optimistic, sound while still sounding like themselves.

I used to get confused when people said that Interpol were heavily influenced by the Cure because I never heard anything that linked the two musically. Now I know they share a bond over their early cold atmospheric tunes, but on “Our Love to Admire” I can hear Paul Banks using little sighs or trailing off in a very Robert Smith-like way. This is one of the elements that at times lends an oddly romantic touch to Interpol’s music. The lyrics in “The Scale” (2) feature a verse; “Pick a rose to hide my face”, and the imagery of that combined with the song makes me think of a Baroque love affair. Interpol have always been mysterious, but this album is the first time that they’ve also seemed mysterious as well as overtly romantic.

Other obvious highlights of the album are the lead single “The Heinrich Maneuver” (4) which will have you singing “My god!” along with the song after a few listens. My vote for follow up single would have to be the following track, “Mammoth” (5) that features the most vocal variety that Paul Banks has ever featured on one track before. To complete the one two three punch is the critical quieter calmer single follow up song “Pace is the Trick” (6) that has breaks and quieter parts that make the rock out parts that much more intense. I could favor other songs as time goes on since the more I listen to the other tracks the more they grow on me. Such is the fate of Interpol songs to grow into your consciousness to the point of when you’re walking through the park with someone you’ll turn to them and start reciting non chorus lyrics with a Paul Banks rhythm. Overall, Interpol have released a pleasing expansion of their sound that, with a few listens, will grow into a new favorite, if not your favorite so far.

Interpol Myspace

Buy “Our Love To Admire”

MP3 – Interpol – Pace is the Trick

MP3 – Interpol – Mammoth

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